sequoia and ponderosa pine, as well as gigantis the fire monster
NO... but all building require two ways to exit the building if there is a fire ...(if its more then 2 stories high)
There are two species that are "feared": 1. The Fire Ant, 2. The Army Ant.
No, NFPA National Fire Code does not require any fire extinguishers in any one- or two- family dwellings, although there is certainly no reason not to have one or more.
No. These two species come from completely different parts of the world and require different care from one another.
Seeing as we are the only species that have greed, and want so much besides what we need, we will do what we want to get it. Also, we are the only species in control of FIRE, and who wouldn't play with that. Two words to sum it all up : ATOMIC BOMB.
Two words: fire station
Interspecific competition occurs when two or more species-populations require some resource (typically food or space), but the resource is not abundant enough to support all of them at the sizes they would attain in the absence of the other species-populations.
The two surviving species of elephants are African and Indian.
To make fire with sticks, you can use a method called friction fire starting. This involves rubbing a stick against a flat piece of wood to create enough heat to ignite a fire. The two most common techniques are the bow drill method and the hand drill method. Both methods require practice and patience to master.
The Bactrian camel is the species that has two humps on its back.
Some primitive species have only one gender, while there are also various hermaphrodite species. However, having two genders, or sexes, provides evolutionary advantages because both parents contribute to the genetic makeup of the offspring. In species where offspring require two parents, beneficial genetic variations can propagate more readily throughout the entire population. A third gender would seem to offer no genetic advantage, but just complicate relationships.
There are two genera of rattlesnake - crotalus and sistrurus. There are about 36 species between these two genera,